Thursday, October 10, 2013

REVIEW: DAUGHTER OF SMOKE AND BONE by Laini Taylor

Title: Daughter of Smoke and Bone
Series: Daughter of Smoke and Bone, #1
Author: Laini Taylor
Publisher: Little Brown Books for Young Readers
Publication Date: September 27, 2011
Genres: YA, Paranormal Romance
Reviewed by: Books4Tomorrow
Source: Purchased
My rating: 5/5

SUMMARY

Around the world, black handprints are appearing on doorways, scorched there by winged strangers who have crept through a slit in the sky.

In a dark and dusty shop, a devil’s supply of human teeth grown dangerously low.

And in the tangled lanes of Prague, a young art student is about to be caught up in a brutal otherwordly war.

Meet Karou. She fills her sketchbooks with monsters that may or may not be real, she’s prone to disappearing on mysterious "errands", she speaks many languages - not all of them human - and her bright blue hairactually grows out of her head that color. Who is she? That is the question that haunts her, and she’s about to find out.

When beautiful, haunted Akiva fixes fiery eyes on her in an alley in Marrakesh, the result is blood and starlight, secrets unveiled, and a star-crossed love whose roots drink deep of a violent past. But will Karou live to regret learning the truth about herself?




REVIEW

The tagline that hooked me before I even started on the first chapter:

Once upon a time, an angel and a devil fell in love. It did not end well.

I’ve seen this book on countless blogs; all with glowing five-star reviews. I just had to see what all the excitement and rapture was about. And as you can tell from my rating, I’m in full agreement with all the other readers out there singing their praises for Taylor’s work of genius. Daughter of Smoke and Bone is not simply a book. It is an experience that needs to be savored again and again and again. Whatever I’m going to read next is going to have a tough time living up to the wonder and amazement this novel has left with me.

The first thing that caught my attention was the poetically descriptive writing, painting a clear picture in my mind of the characters and their surroundings. Two pages into the story I was already miles away from reality, immersed into a world unlike any other. Discovering that the backdrop for this story is Prague in all its splendor, came as a delightful surprise and a welcome change from the American high-school setting for countless YA novels. Prague being only one of many portals all over the world into Brimstone’s Shop, was an even better discovery. This is where the story really got its unrelenting hold on me. I was enthralled by the creatures and characters that came to life here; the same ones which chapters earlier were only drawings in Karou’s sketchbook, seemingly borne from her imagination and her hand.

Karou’s best friend, Zuzana – in all her tiny glory – is undoubtedly one of my absolute favorite characters. Small, feisty and snarky, her wit had me in stitches time and again. Elegant, graceful, mysterious and different in oh-so-many ways, Karou intrigued me to no end. Keeping her two lives in balance isn’t child’s play, but she managed to pull it off effortlessly. On one hand she’s a seventeen-year-old art student in Prague; on the other, she’s errand girl to an inhuman creature who’s the closest thing she’s ever had to family. It was easy to warm-up to her enigmatic character, and I was especially fascinated by the air of mystery surrounding her, not to mention the creatures living in Brimstone Shop which she considers her family. Karou is tough-as-nails and I was absolutely bowled over by the mere fact that her actions and reactions are in no way influenced by her feelings for her love-interest. The author repeatedly puts her through the wringer and then some, but Karou continues to grow stronger right in front of the reader’s eyes.

Once upon a time, a little girl was raised by monsters. But angels burned the doorways to their world, and she was all alone.

Brimstone, Issa, Yasri, Kishmish, and all the rest also swiftly became firm favorites of mine. I was as sad as Karou when the portals to “Elsewhere” were severed, leaving her stranded, alone and cut-off from the only family she had ever known. At first I didn’t know what to make of the angel, Akiva, and I had a hard time deciding whether I should like him or not. Nonetheless, I was overjoyed that the romantic aspect turned out to be unlike anything I’ve ever read in any other YA book. For starters, there was no insta-love between Karou en Akiva, yet the chemistry between them was electric and their ensuing romance deep and meaningful. Trust me, this is no ordinary, wishy-washy, read-it-before romance. Even the love and bonds formed by this unusual family of beasts and a human girl was written with sensitivity and care – so much so I am still not sure which side are the good guys and which side the bad.  And then there’s the ending... The heart wrenching, shocking ending, which just about left me in tears, and at the same time looking forward to reading the next book in the series, which, so by the way, I already purchased once I got halfway into this one. 

Daughter of Smoke and Bone without a doubt lives up to all the hype surrounding it and is deserving of all the praise it receives. It is entirely different from, and so much more than, your average angel vs. demon love story, and most certainly in a league of its own.  I recommend it to fans of mythology, paranormal romance, and readers who enjoy Julie Kagawa’s books. If you already have this book on your to-be-read list, move it to the top. Now!



READ more REVIEWS

Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor has 10 219 reviews on Goodreads. Read it here.

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ABOUT the AUTHOR

I'm a writer of fantasy books for young people, but my books can be enjoyed by adults as well. My 'Dreamdark' books, Blackbringer (2007) and Silksinger (2009) are about faeries -- not dainty little flowery things, but warrior-faeries who battle devils. My first young adult book, Lips Touch, is a finalist for the 2009 National Book Award! It's creepy, sensual supernatural romance. . . about kissing. I am also an artist with a licensed gift product line called "Laini's Ladies."
  
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Wednesday, October 9, 2013

FREE BOOK FEATURE: SWEET KAROLINE by Catherine Astolfo

Title: Sweet Karoline
Author: Catherine Astolfo
Publisher: Imajin Books
Publication Date: July 9, 2013
Genre: Psychological Suspense Mystery

SUMMARY

"If I knew what I know now, would I have searched so hard for the truth?" 
Anne Williams says she killed her best friend, Karoline. But did she? Or is there more to Karoline's mysterious death than meets the eye? 
Anne embarks on a compelling journey to discover her past and exposes an unusual history, horrific crimes and appalling betrayals. Through unexpected turns and revelations, Anne learns about love, family and who she really is. Can she survive the truth?




PURCHASE LINK

This book is available for FREE download from Amazon from 9-11 October 2013! Get your copy HERE.

ABOUT the AUTHOR


Writing is Catherine’s passion. She can recall inventing fantasy stories for her classmates in Grade Three. Her short stories and poems have been published in a number of literary Canadian presses. In 2005, she won a Brampton Arts Award. Her short stories won the Bloody Words Short Story Award (second and first) in 2009 and 2010. She won the prestigious Arthur Ellis Best Short Crime Story Award in 2012.

Catherine’s novel series, The Emily Taylor Mysteries, are published by Imajin Books and are optioned for film by Sisbro & Co. Inc. Sweet Karoline was released on July 14, 2013.


AUTHOR LINKS

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BLOG TOUR: EXCERPT: THE JOSHUA STONE by James Barney




Title: The Joshua Stone
Author: James Barney
Publisher: William Morrow
Publication Date: October 8, 2013
Genres: Thriller, Suspense

SUMMARY

In 1959, in an underground laboratory in a remote region of West Virginia, a secret government experiment went terribly awry. A half dozen scientists mysteriously disappeared, and all subsequent efforts to rescue them failed. In desperation, President Eisenhower ordered the lab sealed shut and all records of its existence destroyed. Now, fifty-four years later, something from the lab has emerged.

When mysterious events begin occurring along the New River Valley in West Virginia, government agents Mike Califano and Ana Thorne are sent to investigate. What they discover will shake the foundations of science and religion and put both agents in the crosshairs of a deadly, worldwide conspiracy. A powerful and mysterious force has been unleashed, and it's about to fall into the wrong hands. To prevent a global catastrophe, Califano and Thorne must work together to solve a biblical mystery that has confounded scholars for centuries. And they must do so quickly, before time runs out . . . forever.





EXCERPT

PROLOGUE

Thurmond, West Virginia
October 5, 1959
IT was time. Dr. Franz Holzberg stood at the security desk of the Thurmond National Laboratory and waited patiently for the guard to buzz him through the heavy steel door that provided access to the lab. Funny, he thought as he waited. They don’t even know what they’re guarding. He shook his head and considered that thought for a moment.
If they only knew . . .
A second later, the door opened with a loud buzz, and Holzberg stepped into a steel enclosure about five feet square and seven feet tall. He turned to face the guard and pulled a chain-link safety gate across the opening.
“Ready?” asked the guard.
Holzberg nodded, and the compartment in which he stood suddenly lurched downward and began its long descent toward the laboratory spaces, nine hundred feet below the ground.
Two minutes later, the elevator shuddered to a halt, and Dr. Holzberg exited into a wide, empty passageway, about twenty feet across and two hundred feet long. The cracked, concrete floor was sparsely illuminated by overhead industrial lighting. A pair of rusty trolley rails ran down the middle of the corridor—a remnant of the mining operations that had once taken place there decades earlier.
Holzberg took a deep breath and savored the pungent smell of sulfur and stagnant water. After three long years of working on this project, he actually felt more at home underground than in the charmless cinder-block rambler that the government had provided for him “up top,” in Thurmond.
He started off toward the laboratory at the end of the corridor, his footsteps echoing loudly throughout the vast space. As he walked, the protocol for Experiment TNL-213 streamed through his mind for the thousandth time. Today is the day, he reminded himself, allowing just the faintest of smiles. Today, God would heed his command. Just as God heeded Joshua’s command at Gibeon.
Holzberg passed through the laboratory’s heavy security door and entered a long, rectangular room resembling a tunnel, with unpainted cement walls, ceiling, and floor.
The middle of the room was dominated by a large pool of water, twenty by thirty feet across and thirty feet deep, with a steel catwalk extending across it. A sturdy steel railing circumscribed the edge of the pool. Overhead, four long rows of incandescent bulbs illuminated the entire room with bright, white light. High up on the walls, thick, multicolored bundles of wires and cables snaked like garlands across sturdy brackets, with smaller bundles dropping down at uneven intervals to various lab equipment and workstations around the room.
Holzberg spotted four technicians in white lab coats busily preparing the lab for the upcoming experiment. He acknowledged them with a nod and then quickly made his way to an elevated control room overlooking the pool. He entered without knocking and greeted the room’s sole occupant, a bespectacled man in a white lab coat. “Good morning, Irwin,” said Holzberg in a thick German accent. “How are the modifications coming along?”
Dr. Irwin Michelson swiveled on his stool. He was a wiry man in his midthirties, with disheveled black hair and a two-day- old beard. He pushed his glasses up on his nose.
“They’re done,” he said.
“Done? You’ve tested it?”
“We changed out the power supply, like you suggested, and increased the cooling flow to two hundred gallons per minute. We tested it last night and were able to generate a ninety tesla pulse for twenty-five seconds with no overheating. We probably could go higher if we needed to.”
“Good. And the sensors and transducers?”
“All set.”
Holzberg nodded appreciatively to his tireless assistant.
“Sehr gut. Then let’s proceed.”
It took nearly three hours for Holzberg, Michelson, and their team of four technicians to complete the exhaustive checklist for TNL-213.
This experiment had taken three years to plan and had required millions of dollars in upgrades and modifications to the lab.
Nothing would be left to chance today.
By early afternoon they’d finished their thorough inspection of the equipment. They’d checked, double-checked, and triple-checked each of the hundreds of valves, levers, and switches associated with the lab’s “swimming pool” test rig. Everything was positioned according to a detailed test protocol that Dr. Holzberg carried in a thick binder prominently marked top secret—winter solstice.
Michelson knelt on the steel catwalk that bridged the 160,000-gallon pool of water and carefully inspected a rectangular steel chamber that was suspended above the water by four thick cables. Numerous electrical sensors were welded to the exterior of this chamber, and a rainbow of waterproof wires radiated out from it, coiling upward toward a thick, retractable wiring harness above the catwalk.
“Transducers are secure,” Michelson said over his shoulder.
“Good,” said Holzberg from the railing. He made a checkmark in his notebook and read the next step of the protocol aloud. “Mount the seed.”
Michelson stood and turned slowly to face his mentor.
“So it’s time?”
Holzberg nodded.
Michelson dragged a hand over his unshaven face and cracked a smile. “God, this . . . this is incredible.” He was barely able to contain his excitement. “This’ll give us a whole new understanding of the universe.”
“Perhaps,” said Holzberg.
“Right, perhaps. And perhaps the Nobel Prize, too.”
“No,” said Holzberg firmly, his expression suddenly turning dark.
“But . . . if this works, we could publish our findings. By then the government—”
“Irwin, no. We’ve had this discussion before.”
Michelson sighed and looked deflated. “Right, I know. Not until the world is ready.”
Holzberg inched closer to his protégé. “Irwin, this is a responsibility you must accept. Einstein himself was confounded by this material.”
“Einstein was overrated,” Michelson mumbled.
“Perhaps. But that does not change the fact that we have been entrusted with something very special here. We must study and solve it. Until we do, it is simply too dangerous to expose to the world. That is our burden. Do you understand?”
Michelson nodded sheepishly. Holzberg patted his younger colleague’s shoulder.
“Good. Now, let’s get the seed.”
The two men made their way to the far end of the room, where a circular vault was mounted flush with the cement wall. The vault door was protected by a bank-grade, dual-combination lock with twin tumblers. “Ready?” Holzberg asked.
Michelson nodded.
One after the other, the two men turned the pair of dials on the vault door four times each, alternating clockwise and counterclockwise. When the last of the eight numbers had been entered, Michelson pulled down hard on the heavy handle in the center of the door, and the vault opened with a metallic ka-chunk. He swung the door open slowly, and, as he did, the vault’s lights flickered, illuminating the interior with an ethereal blue light.
There was only one object in the vault: a clear glass cylinder about eight inches high and four inches in diameter housing an irregular black clump about the size of a golf ball. “The seed,” Holzberg whispered as he reached inside and retrieved the cylinder, cradling it carefully in both hands. He held it up to the light and peered inside. “Your secrets unfold today.”
Thirty minutes later, with the seed securely mounted in its special test chamber, and the chamber lowered deep into the pool, the two scientists returned to the control room for their final preparations.
“Transducer twenty-one?” said Holzberg, reading aloud from the test protocol.
Michelson pressed a button on the complex control panel and verified that transducer 21 was providing an appropriate signal. “Check.”
“Transducer twenty-two?”
Michelson repeated the procedure for transducer 22.
“Check.”
“That’s it then,” said Holzberg, turning to a new page in his notebook. “We’re ready.”
He checked his watch, which indicated 4:15 p.m. Then he picked up a microphone that was attached to the control panel by a long wire. “Gentlemen,” he announced over the lab’s PA system. “We are ready to commence experiment 213. Please take your positions.”
In the lab space below, the four technicians quickly took up positions at their various workstations. One after another, they gave the thumbs-up signal that they were ready.
“Energize the steady-field magnet,” announced Holzberg.
A loud, steady hum suddenly filled the lab, followed by the sound of rotating equipment slowly whirring to life.
Several seconds later, Michelson quietly reported over his shoulder that the steady-field magnet was energized and warming up.
“Remember,” Holzberg said, “bring it up slowly.”
Michelson nodded. “We’re at thirteen teslas and rising,” he said, his attention focused on a circular dial on the control panel.
“And the cooling water outlet temperature?”
Michelson glanced at another gauge. “Sixty-two degrees.”
Eight minutes later, Michelson announced they were at 25 teslas, the peak field for the steady-field magnet.
“Outlet temperature’s creeping up slightly,” he added with a hint of caution.
“What about delta T?”
Michelson pushed a button and read from a gauge on his panel. “Nothing yet. Zero point zero.”
Holzberg pressed the microphone button and announced to the lab, “Prepare to energize the pulse magnet.”
There was a flurry of activity in the lab space below as the technicians quickly went about opening valves, flipping switches, and starting various pumps and other equipment. Eventually, all four gave the thumbs-up signal.
“Ready,” reported Michelson.
Holzberg swallowed hard. This was it. He paused for a moment before giving the final command. “Energize it now.”
Michelson pulled down on an electrical breaker until it clicked loudly into place. A deep buzzing sound immediately permeated the entire laboratory. The overhead lights dimmed momentarily and then slowly returned to their original intensity. “Energized,” he reported nervously.
“Bring it up slowly.”
“Total field is twenty-seven point three teslas.” Michelson was slowly turning a large knob in the center of the control panel.
“Outlet temperature?”
“Seventy-eight degrees.”
“Keep going.”
Michelson continued turning the knob slowly until the magnetic-field strength had reached 70 teslas. There he paused and quickly checked his instruments.

“Outlet temperature is one hundred twenty-two degrees and rising,” he said nervously. “We don’t have much more room.”
“Any delta T?”
Michelson checked again and shook his head. “No. Still zero point zero.”
“Keep going,” said Holzberg.
Michelson nodded and again twisted the dial clockwise. He read out the magnetic-field strengths as he went.
“Seventy-six point four. Seventy-eight point zero. Eighty point two . . .”
“Temperatures, Irwin.”
Michelson quickly turned his attention to the outlet temperature gauge. “One hundred forty-five degrees and rising.”
“Keep going,” Holzberg said.
“Eighty-one teslas,” said Michelson nervously. “Eighty-two. Eighty-three.”
His voice cracked slightly. “Uh . . . we’re getting close to the outlet limit.”
“Any delta T yet?”
Michelson quickly checked. “No. Zero point zero.”
“We need a higher field.” Holzberg touched Michelson’s shoulder and nodded emphatically for him to continue.
Michelson’s voice grew increasingly nervous as he continued reporting the rising magnetic-flux levels. “Eighty-seven point three. Eighty-eight point four. Eighty-nine point six . . . ninety point one.”
Suddenly, there was a loud beep, and an amber light began flashing on the control panel.
“Outlet temperature alarm,” Michelson reported. “One hundred seventy-five degrees and still rising. Should I bring it back down?”
“No,” said Holzberg firmly. “We need a higher field.”
Michelson started to protest, but Holzberg cut him off.
“Irwin, the flux levels!”
Michelson snapped his attention back to the control panel. “Ninety-three point one . . . ninety-four point four . . .shit.”
Another shrill alarm sounded on the panel.
“Core temperature alarm!” Michelson shouted above the noise. “We’ve got to shut it down!” He began turning the knob counterclockwise.
“No!” Holzberg barked, grabbing his arm. “Check the delta T.”
Michelson wiped his brow and checked. “Delta T is . . . zero point one seconds.”
“My God,” Holzberg whispered. “It’s working!”
“Zero point two seconds,” Michelson reported, still holding down the button. “Zero point three . . . zero point four.”
“Bring it up just a bit more,” said Holzberg over the constant noise of the two alarms.
“But—”
“Do it!” Holzberg snapped.
Michelson swallowed hard and slowly tweaked the knob clockwise to increase the power to the pulse magnet.
“We’re gonna lift a relief valve.”
“What’s the reading?”
Michelson pushed the delta T button. “Whoa . . .”
“What is it?”
“Ten point five seconds. That’s incredible.” He continued holding the button down. “Fourteen seconds . . . twenty . . . thirty . . . fifty . . .”
“We’ve done it!” Holzberg exclaimed, patting Michelson on the back. “Okay, you can bring it back down now.”
Michelson quickly began twisting the knob counterclockwise. After several seconds, however, he suddenly looked confused.
“What is it?”
“Outlet temperature’s . . . still going up.” Michelson quickly pushed the button for delta T again. “Holy shit.”
Holzberg leaned in close and observed that the dial for delta T was now spinning rapidly clockwise. An odometer-style counter below the dial indicated that the accumulated value was now at 500 seconds . . . 600 seconds . . . 700 seconds.. . . The dial was spinning faster and faster.
“Shut it down!” Holzberg bellowed.
“I am. Look!” Michelson showed that he had already twisted the knob for the pulse magnet all the way to the left.
“Cut the power!”
At that moment, a thunderous scream erupted in the lab space below, and thick plumes of steam instantly billowed up from the pool. The technicians could be heard screaming emphatically to each other.
“Relief valves are lifting!” Michelson yelled over the cacophony.
Holzberg was just about to say something when suddenly there was a blinding flash of white light below. Instinctively, he shielded his eyes.
“My God,” Michelson shouted. “Look at that!”
Holzberg uncovered his eyes and gazed in awe at the spectacle now occurring in the lab below him. A brilliant aura of light was hovering directly above the reactor pool, swirling in undulating patterns of blue, green, red, and yellow. The aura lasted for several seconds before giving way to a violent, blinding column of light that shot suddenly out of the pool, straight to the ceiling.
Holzberg again shielded his eyes.
A split second later, there was a loud whoosh and the entire lab filled with blinding white light. The control room windows shattered instantly, and Dr. Holzberg hit the floor.
The blinding light and whooshing sound subsided after several seconds, leaving in their place a terrifying jumble of alarm sirens and horns and the panicked shouts of the technicians below. Holzberg groped on hands and knees through the broken glass until he found the prone body of Dr. Michelson, who was either unconscious or dead.
“Irwin!” said Dr. Holzberg.
There was no response.
With effort, Holzberg pulled himself to his feet and gazed in utter disbelief at the chaos unfolding below him.
“Mein Gott,” he whispered. “What have we done?”
A second later, a man in a black leather coat suddenly appeared in the lab space below, seemingly from nowhere. Who is that? Holzberg wondered, utterly confused. And why does he look familiar?



PURCHASE LINKS


ABOUT the AUTHOR


James Barney is the critically acclaimed author of The Genesis Key. He is an attorney who lives outside Washington D.C., with his wife and two children.

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Monday, October 7, 2013

COVER REVEAL: THE PERIMETER (Outside, #3) by Shalini Boland

Title: The Perimeter
Series: The Outside, #3
Author: Shalini Boland
Publisher: Self-published
Publication Date: November 18, 2013
Genres: Dystopian, Post-Apocalyptic

SUMMARY

There’s a sinister force coming for Riley, and the only things keeping her safe are a perimeter fence and the people she loves. As her life is threatened, she must make impossible choices. But help comes from the most unlikely of places, and all Riley needs to know is: Who can she really trust?

Meanwhile, a repentant killer searches for peace and redemption. Things become twisted when he is faced with the exact opposite, and pretty soon he will have to make the hardest decision of his life.

The Perimeter is a darkly captivating YA tale that will have you on the edge of your seat and up at night turning the pages to find out what happens next . . .


FIRST TWO BOOKS IN THIS SERIES

(Click on the covers for book descriptions)






ABOUT the AUTHOR

Shalini lives in Dorset, England with her husband and two noisy boys. Before children, she was signed to Universal Music as a singer songwriter. Now, writing novels has hijacked her life and she is usually to be found with a laptop welded to her fingers and the house in a permanent state of neglect.



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Sunday, October 6, 2013

GUEST REVIEW: ELEMENTAL MAGIC (Elemental Magic, #1) by Angela Wallace

Title: Elemental Magic
Series: Elemental Magic, #1
Author: Angela Wallace
Publisher: Self-published
Publication Date: November 19, 2011
Genre: Urban Fantasy
Reviewed by: Ellen Fritz
Ellen’s rating: 5/5

SUMMARY

Aileen Donovan is an oceanographer with magical control over the element of water. While her normal focus is on research and fighting poachers, she’s about to go up against the stuff of legends—and that’s saying something for a supernatural.

A transport ship is missing and everyone’s eager to get their hands on the cargo. No one knows what exactly it is, but when fragments resembling coral begin to drive local residents insane, Aileen suspects a preternatural source. Whatever is at the bottom of the ocean, a power-hungry alchemist wants it, and releases a sea dragon to eat the competition—literally.

Aileen sees this as an opportunity to win the professional recognition she desires, but keeping secrets is complicated when she’s working with local Coast Guard officer Colin Benson. Her sense of love and duty will be put to the test, and when the tide washes out, it might have been better if that lost ship had stayed lost.




REVIEW

I finished Elemental Magic in less than two days and enjoyed every moment. Getting a shiner from an attempted kiss by a sea lion and dealing with poachers and pollution threats are all in a day's work for Aileen Donovan, her brother Keenan, their father and their co-workers. Facing a greedy maniac who wants to salvage the cargo on his sunken ship and dealing with a sea monster that was believed to be extinct, is not so much part of everyday life.

This gripping page-turner is written in such a comfortable, fluent style that one is tempted to continue reading and ignore mundane things like time. The author keeps the perfect balance between riveting action, intrigue, nail-biting suspense and the extremely well-written romantic part of the story. Readers who are interested in the sea and the science surrounding it should find this book a particularly stimulating read. For the fantasy enthusiasts there are numerous magical artefacts, element-wielding characters and my favorite, Setus, the sea dragon.

All the characters in this book are realistic and well fleshed out. Aileen, the main character, isn't the most diplomatic person around but she has a fierce sense of loyalty towards her family and co-workers. She can also kick butt in a fight; especially when she has water at her disposal. Between the pyromaniacs and evil alchemists it is really difficult to work out who the real villain of the story is until the very end. I suggest the sensitive reader keep a couple of Kleenex close by.

I highly recommend Elemental Magic as a thoroughly exciting, often amusing and deeply heart-warming book for readers of all ages.




READ more REVIEWS

Elemental Magic by Angela Wallace has 53 reviews on Goodreads. Read it here.

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ABOUT the AUTHOR

Angela Wallace has been penning adventures ever since she was sucked through a magical portal as a child. What she saw and whom she met gave birth to exciting and complex fantasy worlds where defying the laws of physics was a bonus. She has since come back down to earth, only to discover this mortal realm has magic of its own. Now she is quite at home in the world of urban fantasy, though believes that love, faith, and hope are of a stronger magic than fire wielding and sorcery. She loves gun-toting good boys, and could have been a cop in another life except real blood makes her queasy. She’ll have to stick to solving supernatural mysteries. Language is her pleasure, whether it’s weaving words on a page or lassoing linguistics into translations as a sign language interpreter.

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GUEST REVIEW: THE BODY ON THE T by Mike Martin

Title: The Body on the T
Series: Sgt. Windfower Mystery, #2
Author: Mike Martin
Publisher: Baico Publishing
Publication Date: April 1, 2013
Genre: Mystery
Reviewed by: Margitte
Source: Amazon
Margitte’s rating: 4/5

SUMMARY

The Body on the T is the second book in the Windflower mystery series and it follows up on the highly acclaimed premiere, The Walker on the Cape. The story begins when a body washes up on a beach near Grand Bank, Newfoundland. There is no identification on the body and few clues to identify who the person was or where they came from. The case becomes the responsibility of Sgt. Winston Windflower of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and his trusted side-kick, Corporal Eddie Tizzard.

But this is just the beginning. There is also a devastating accident on the highway and another suspicious death to deal with. Throw in a rogue police officer and an international drug ring operating in the waters off the coast and Windflower’s peaceful world is turned upside down. This time Windflower’s adventures take him to the scenic town of Burin where Captain Cook once patrolled the waters looking for French mercenaries. And to historic St. John’s where he faces down an armed suspect on a parking garage rooftop in the midst of a busy downtown evening.

Along the way Windflower also continues to enjoy the food and home-style hospitality of this part of the world. Cod tongues, pan seared scallops and even figgy duff become part of his diet, and his long list of favourite foods. Windflower may be a long way from his Cree home in Northern Alberta but he has found a new place to love in the fog and mist of Newfoundland.




REVIEW

Grand Bank, southeast coast of Newfoundland Canada. This is the little part of heaven where RCMP Sergeant Winston Windflower, his girlfriend, Sheila Hillier, his sidekick , the incessant chattering Corporal Eddie Tizzard and his other interesting friends get to spend a quiet uncomplicated life. 

Their days are filled with culinary delights, chess- and card games and generally as little trouble as possible. But that was before a body is discovered on the T and a fortune cookie promises him exciting times ahead. With the cod fish industry going belly up, a few people in town have to find other ways of keeping the peanut-butter cheesecake affordable and on the menu for many, and their conduct promises to give a totally different meaning to the concept of exciting times...

For some people, trouble is their comfort zone, and where there aren't any, they create it in any which way they can. After all, a little bit more trouble can bring a little bit more monetary cushioning in their lives. They are a bunch of characters that would stir the pot considerably for Winston Windlfower: people such as Claude Lapierre; Roger Buffet; and Ernie Daley, the slime bucket, who does not mind the "hoccupational azzards" his aspirations would incur; and the mayor, Francis Tibbo, waddling in on the action, sputtering "What is going on in this community, Sergeant? Dead bodies being found by children as they play on the beach? A well-known community member dragged out of the water? People want answers, I want answers!" His attempt at righteous indignation came across as shrill and fatuous. Francis Fatuous. It fits indeed.

From then on, not only the cod tongues gets steamed up, or fried, with scallops on the side, dished out with a rosé sauce made of tomatoes, fresh, cream, black pepper, onions, and some Parmesan cheese. Like the cod and vegetables forming a scrumptious community on the plate, the people of Grand Banks are in for a serious drill on the grill of bad intentions and good guys stepping in to save the day in a thrilling adventure along the beautiful coast lines of Newfoundland. Nothing will ever be the same.

Like the sauce, the story promises to be just as tart and tangy. Exhilaration and drama drives this easy, decent read. It is a fast read, yet slow enough to include a complete image of life in Grand Bank Newfoundland. The detailed scenery, the history, dialects, recipes and many more information in the plot- building ensure that this is undoubtedly a feel-good read.

I recommend this book to the reader who enjoys a good story that would not spread gut and gore all over the ocean floor. It is clean, fresh and perfectly spiced.




PURCHASE LINK


(Click on the cover for the book description)


Saturday, October 5, 2013

MINI-RANT: GIVEAWAY PRIZES


I’m going to try and not go into a lengthy rant about a little something called common courtesy, but I feel that it needs to be said as a reminder to those who organize giveaways. My experiences (and the below example) have mostly stemmed from giveaways sponsored by authors, but this is aimed at publishers, tour hosts, and bloggers as well. 

What inspired this rant? Well, today I heard about a fellow book reviewer who entered a giveaway a few months ago in which the author offered signed copies of her book as prizes to those willing to make flyers and post the flyers everywhere they can, advertising her book. Said reviewer took on the costs of creating and distributing these promo flyers advertising that author’s book, and spent hours doing her part promoting the book online. Subsequently, thanks to all the time and effort she put into this project, she was chosen as a winner to receive signed copies of this author’s books. But to this hour she hasn’t yet received her prize and the author has ignored all her attempts at contacting her.

My own bad experience once was when I entered a giveaway sponsored by an author and I won the first prize which was a Kindle Paper White. The author contacted me about my prize, but took a month to send me the Amazon gift certificate I needed to purchase the Kindle. Every once a week I contacted her she had a different story. More recently I entered a blog tour giveaway where I won a $50 Amazon gift certificate, and the tour host never bothered to contact me about my prize. I saw on one of their posts that I’ve won the Amazon gift card prize, but nowhere in the post was it mentioned that I had to contact them, or was there an email address where I could enquire about my prize. I waited five days for the tour host to contact me, and when they failed to do so, I contacted them. Thereafter I only had to wait two more days for my prize.

This brings me to my point and closer to the end of my rant. People, if you host a giveaway and you know you won’t be able to send out the prize right away after the giveaway has ended, then please state this in your post. Add a little sentence at the top or bottom of your post stating that prizes will be mailed out / gifted at the end of that month, or a week after the rafflecopter has ended, or on a specific date. I don’t include a time limit for prizes on giveaways sponsored by me, because I send out the prize right after I’ve contacted the winner and received her response. If you set-up a giveaway, I assume you’ve worked the costs involved into your budget beforehand. But life happens and sometimes we have to use that money for something else and the prize costs have to come out of the next paycheck. That’s all good and well. All I ask is that you be upfront with your followers about it and give them the option of deciding whether they want to enter a giveaway where they might have to wait a few days/weeks/months for their prize(s).

I think the most important thing organizers of giveaways forget is that they’re making a commitment to those who enter the giveaway. If your followers and those new to your blog / books take the time to do all the things on the rafflecopter you’d like them to do, then you have the same obligation towards the winner(s) to notify them (via email) that they’ve won, and then getting their prizes to them promptly (unless specified as above). I can assure you I won’t be reading that author’s books who took a month to send me my prize, because she wasn’t upfront with me and therefore I have a bad impression of her. Same goes with the tour host who never bothered to contact me about my prize. I’ll probably never enter their giveaways again. So, if you don’t want to lose followers / readers, be considerate. You wouldn’t like having to wait for your prize if you won anything from me, would you?


OK, so this was not really a mini-rant as I had intended, but I hope I got my point across. Has anyone else ever had trouble getting their prize(s) from an author/publisher/tour host/blogger? Share your experiences in the comments (but please keep in mind that – as tempting as it may be - it shouldn’t be a name-and-shame). I’d love to hear from you.